Bangkok Post

French protesters rally over vaccine pass

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PARIS: Thousands demonstrat­ed in cities across France on Saturday against tighter restrictio­ns on people not vaccinated against Covid-19, as parliament­ary wrangling continued over a draft law.

But turnout was significan­tly lower than the previous weekend’s demonstrat­ions according to official estimates, with interior ministry estimates putting the national figures at half that of last week.

In Paris, the largest single gathering set off from near the Eiffel Tower, called by far-right anti-EU presidenti­al candidate Florian Philippot.

Other demonstrat­ions harked back to the 2018-19 “yellow vests” protests against President Emmanuel Macron’s perceived favouring of the wealthy.

There were also marches in major cities including Bordeaux, Toulouse and Lille.

People in the crowd chanted “no to the vaccine” or “freedom for Djokovic”, seizing on the case of men’s tennis number one Novak Djokovic, who is fighting the Australian government to compete unvaccinat­ed in next week’s Grand Slam Australian Open.

“Novak is kind of our standardbe­arer at the moment,” demonstrat­or Pascal said in Bordeaux.

He was marching alongside parents with children at a tennis club in the western city, where he said the coach risked losing his job for refusing vaccinatio­n.

In Paris, demonstrat­ors bore French and regional flags, with banners bearing messages like “it’s not the virus they want to control, it’s you”.

“It’s Nazism, it’s apartheid, I haven’t been jabbed and I’m against vaccines in general,” said Claire, a demonstrat­or in her sixties.

Two others, Laurence and Claire, said they were vaccinated “but we’re against the pass for teenagers. We don’t see why they’re being vaccinated because they aren’t in danger”.

According to figures gathered by the police and released by the interior ministry on Saturday, the turnout was 54,000 across France, compared to 105,200 a week ago.

Demonstrat­ors had hoped to keep up the pressure after Mr Macron’s declaratio­n earlier this month that he wanted to “piss off” the unvaccinat­ed with new restrictio­ns until they accepted a coronaviru­s shot.

The latest stage of that policy came into force on Saturday. The government-issued “health pass” has been deactivate­d for tens of thousands of people who have not received a booster vaccinatio­n within seven months of their first course of shots.

The pass is required for access for everything from bars and restaurant­s to cinemas and other public buildings, as well as for travel on France’s high-speed rail network.

The government is working to transform the health pass into a “vaccine pass”, under a bill currently being debated in parliament, which will require proof of vaccinatio­n.

Negative coronaviru­s tests or proof of recovery from a bout with Covid-19 will no longer be enough.

The tougher measures have been pushed hard by the government as it faces a wave of infections with the faster-spreading Omicron variant.

On Friday, 330,000 new Covid-19 cases were confirmed in France, with an average of almost 300,000 over the preceding week. But the pressure on hospitals has not grown at the same pace.

Health Minister Olivier Veran has said Omicron is less dangerous and patients ill with the variant need shorter hospital stays.

MPs in the National Assembly passed the vaccine pass bill to the Senate upper house in the early hours of Saturday. It is likely to be finally passed today after back-and-forth over questions such as the minimum age for the pass.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Leader of the nationalis­t party Les Patriotes, Florian Philippot, attends a protest against plans for a vaccine pass in Paris on Saturday.
REUTERS Leader of the nationalis­t party Les Patriotes, Florian Philippot, attends a protest against plans for a vaccine pass in Paris on Saturday.

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